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CASE STUDY
                                  Roots & Routes


                                              by
                                        Martijn Hartog




This document is part of the overall European project LINKS-UP - Learning 2.0 for an Inclusive
Knowledge Society – Understanding the Picture. Further case studies and project results can be
downloaded from the project website http://www.linksup.eu.


Copyright
                       This work has been licensed under a Creative                   Commons      License:
                       Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs
                       http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/




                           This project has been funded with support from the European Commission. This
                           publication reflects the views only of the author(s), and the Commission cannot be
                           held responsible for any use which may be made of the information contained
                           therein.
A lot of projects in the field organize social activities to display the skills of social, eco-
          nomical and cultural disadvantage people. The projects organize an activity where
          young and talented people can perform and show their talent to the public. But most of
          the time, after the performance, the activity stops and there is no follow up for the par-
          ticipants to develop their talent to a professional level.
          Most of the talented people need help to get their skills to a professional level. The gap
          between the art of the street and the vocational education is to wide. Therefore its hard
          to become professional for people with social, economical or cultural disadvantage. This
          also shows in the conservatory where 80 to 90% of the students are white and wealthy.
          This is not a proper reflection of the population.

          Case profile – Roots & Routes in a nutshell

                                       Roots & Routes
                                       Celebrate cultural diversity




Website                                http://www.rootsnroutes.eu
Status                                 Active/running (2001 – 2010)
Interviewed person                     Jeroen Marcelis
                                       Community Rotterdam, Service Art and Culture.
Funded and promoted by…
                                       Leonardo da Vinci, EU programme of education and culture.
                                       Combination of formal setting (e.g. school internship) and non-
Location of the Learning Activities
                                       formal/informal setting (e.g. summer schools, home/online)
                                       Target group are young people between 15 to 25 years who do
Target group(s)                        not have the same chances as most people because of social, cul-
                                       tural or economical circumstances.
Number of users                        858 online users/profiles.
Educational Sector(s)                  Vocational Education (Internship)
Category of the Learning Activities    Combination of formal, non-formal, informal
Web 2.0 technologies used...           Learning blogs, social networking tools, video/audio sharing tools.
Methods to support inclusion           (Peer) e-mentoring, displaying talent of users offline and online.



          Short description and key characteristics
          Roots & Routes gives talents of multi-ethnical cultures and international backgrounds
          the opportunity to enrich their knowledge and skills and take part to an professional ex-
          istence within the creative industry, also by offering the opportunity to get notice of any
          relevant secondary vocational educational program or an higher educational program.
          Roots & Routes is funded by Community Rotterdam , Service Art and Culture (Rotterdam
          was elected cultural capital of Europe in 2001) and Culture and Leonardo da Vinci, EU
          programme of education and culture. For the implementation there were three parties


                                                    2
involved. Miramedia (Social cohesion and intercultural dialogue), NPS (TV programme
maker) and the programme staff of Rotterdam cultural capital had the goal to involve all
layers of the population on a cultural level. The first project was televised by the NPS
with the help of young media makers. The website is created and run by JFC Medienzen-
trum Köln. Roots & Routes is active in 12 counties. In those countries there are 13 part-
ner organisations who organize activities under the Roots & Routes flag.

Dimension of learning and inclusion
Roots & Routes accompanies young talented people who want to come become profes-
sional in music, dance or media. By recruiting young talented people R&R gives them a
change to enhance there talent in a international and cultural group under guidance of
professionals. These groups are as well offline as online. The social networking tools
makes it possible to keep in touch with international participants and follow each others
progress by uploading own material or writing a learning blog.
Another aim is to bring the art of the street closer to the vocational education for
people with a economical, social or cultural disadvantage by getting more experienced
through feedback and training by professionals and the composition of the groups they
gain knowledge being a artist. The competence development makes sure every parti-
cipant experience a certain form of personal and/or professional growth. The know-
ledge is given by the professionals and the user are able to put it into practice at the
same time by festivals. The festivals are a part of the learning cycle but are also a way to
create role models in the target group who can encourage other talents to participate.
By putting a young talent on the stage with big names where talents can display his
skills, the participants sets a good example for people from his own neighbourhood. Par-
ticipants are also stimulate to become peer coaches. The online audio/video sharing
tools makes it easier to comment on each others work.

Innovative elements and key success factors
Roots &Routes is innovative in creating a link between the street art and the formal edu-
cation so participants can re-engage in education to give them a chance to become pro-
fessional in their discipline. Where other initiatives stop after a performance, Roots &
Routes lays more emphasis the next step to professionalize of participants. By focussing
on the professionalization of participants a close connection with the art education is
necessary to offer participants a opportunity to develop. In the Netherlands Roots &
Routes works very closely with the art education field including two Conservatory
Codarts Rotterdam, the Albeda College in Rotterdam.
The approach is that users first experience and learn by doing. After that Roots & Routes
provide the theory. The education material online can support the actual learning by
giving new ideas and good examples in practise. Roots & Roots also follows an innovat-
ive approach as it comes to sharing knowledge. By using the learning blogs and social
networking tool the time where knowledge can be exchanged is expanded. The know-
ledge can be shared faster because the possibility to ask questions online about work-
shops for example. There is also more peer to peer education. Users can upload
audio/video for other users to comment on. Users can listen to each others beats or
view music videos. By peer to peer education online the knowledge transfer expands.




                                        3
Figure 1: Homepage of Roots & Routes with a short introduction of R&R,
                                                                                     news and resent videos




                                                                                Figure 2: Online profile of a user1
1
    The discipline of the user is displayed in the upper left corner. The projects and activities
    that the user participate in is displayed on the left side. When participated in an event
    or activity of Roots & Roots the user can become member of a group. The groups have a
    own environment where they can ask questions and ask advice at the (peer) coaches.


                                                         4
Problems encountered and lessons learned
The first projects, till 2003, focussed on users meeting the professionals and each other
and develop their talents. It were short projects of about a week and were very intens-
ive. Workshop, master class, performance at a festival and project was over. Participants
were clear in that the projects were very cool, but everyone was back at home because
there was no follow up. That was the starting point for Roots & Routes to think about
the next step in this learning chain. This leaded to the development of Summer School
and after that a close partnership with the vocational education.
To reach to target group has been an issue for a long time. The word Summer School is
not appealing by itself for the target group. This is addressed through working on brand-
ing and the deployment of users as ambassadors. Also working with professionals who
are idols for the target group is an important strategy.




                                       5
Collaborating institutions in LINKS-UP

                 Institute for Innovation in Learning, Friedrich-Alex-
                 ander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen,
                 Germany
                 www.fim.uni-erlangen.de



                 Arcola Research LLP, London, United Kingdom
                 www.arcola-research.co.uk




                 eSociety Institute, The Hague University of Applied
                 Sciences, The Hague, The Netherlands
                 www.esocietyinstituut.nl



                 Servizi Didattici e Scientifici per l’Università di Firen-
                 ze, Prato, Italy
                 www.pin.unifi.it



                 Salzburg Research Forschungsgesellschaft, Salzburg,
                 Austria
                 www.salzburgresearch.at


                 European Distance and E-Learning Network (EDEN),
                 Milton Keynes, United Kingdom
                 www.eden-online.org




                   6

More Related Content

Case study Roots and Routes

  • 1. CASE STUDY Roots & Routes by Martijn Hartog This document is part of the overall European project LINKS-UP - Learning 2.0 for an Inclusive Knowledge Society – Understanding the Picture. Further case studies and project results can be downloaded from the project website http://www.linksup.eu. Copyright This work has been licensed under a Creative Commons License: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This project has been funded with support from the European Commission. This publication reflects the views only of the author(s), and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use which may be made of the information contained therein.
  • 2. A lot of projects in the field organize social activities to display the skills of social, eco- nomical and cultural disadvantage people. The projects organize an activity where young and talented people can perform and show their talent to the public. But most of the time, after the performance, the activity stops and there is no follow up for the par- ticipants to develop their talent to a professional level. Most of the talented people need help to get their skills to a professional level. The gap between the art of the street and the vocational education is to wide. Therefore its hard to become professional for people with social, economical or cultural disadvantage. This also shows in the conservatory where 80 to 90% of the students are white and wealthy. This is not a proper reflection of the population. Case profile – Roots & Routes in a nutshell Roots & Routes Celebrate cultural diversity Website http://www.rootsnroutes.eu Status Active/running (2001 – 2010) Interviewed person Jeroen Marcelis Community Rotterdam, Service Art and Culture. Funded and promoted by… Leonardo da Vinci, EU programme of education and culture. Combination of formal setting (e.g. school internship) and non- Location of the Learning Activities formal/informal setting (e.g. summer schools, home/online) Target group are young people between 15 to 25 years who do Target group(s) not have the same chances as most people because of social, cul- tural or economical circumstances. Number of users 858 online users/profiles. Educational Sector(s) Vocational Education (Internship) Category of the Learning Activities Combination of formal, non-formal, informal Web 2.0 technologies used... Learning blogs, social networking tools, video/audio sharing tools. Methods to support inclusion (Peer) e-mentoring, displaying talent of users offline and online. Short description and key characteristics Roots & Routes gives talents of multi-ethnical cultures and international backgrounds the opportunity to enrich their knowledge and skills and take part to an professional ex- istence within the creative industry, also by offering the opportunity to get notice of any relevant secondary vocational educational program or an higher educational program. Roots & Routes is funded by Community Rotterdam , Service Art and Culture (Rotterdam was elected cultural capital of Europe in 2001) and Culture and Leonardo da Vinci, EU programme of education and culture. For the implementation there were three parties 2
  • 3. involved. Miramedia (Social cohesion and intercultural dialogue), NPS (TV programme maker) and the programme staff of Rotterdam cultural capital had the goal to involve all layers of the population on a cultural level. The first project was televised by the NPS with the help of young media makers. The website is created and run by JFC Medienzen- trum Köln. Roots & Routes is active in 12 counties. In those countries there are 13 part- ner organisations who organize activities under the Roots & Routes flag. Dimension of learning and inclusion Roots & Routes accompanies young talented people who want to come become profes- sional in music, dance or media. By recruiting young talented people R&R gives them a change to enhance there talent in a international and cultural group under guidance of professionals. These groups are as well offline as online. The social networking tools makes it possible to keep in touch with international participants and follow each others progress by uploading own material or writing a learning blog. Another aim is to bring the art of the street closer to the vocational education for people with a economical, social or cultural disadvantage by getting more experienced through feedback and training by professionals and the composition of the groups they gain knowledge being a artist. The competence development makes sure every parti- cipant experience a certain form of personal and/or professional growth. The know- ledge is given by the professionals and the user are able to put it into practice at the same time by festivals. The festivals are a part of the learning cycle but are also a way to create role models in the target group who can encourage other talents to participate. By putting a young talent on the stage with big names where talents can display his skills, the participants sets a good example for people from his own neighbourhood. Par- ticipants are also stimulate to become peer coaches. The online audio/video sharing tools makes it easier to comment on each others work. Innovative elements and key success factors Roots &Routes is innovative in creating a link between the street art and the formal edu- cation so participants can re-engage in education to give them a chance to become pro- fessional in their discipline. Where other initiatives stop after a performance, Roots & Routes lays more emphasis the next step to professionalize of participants. By focussing on the professionalization of participants a close connection with the art education is necessary to offer participants a opportunity to develop. In the Netherlands Roots & Routes works very closely with the art education field including two Conservatory Codarts Rotterdam, the Albeda College in Rotterdam. The approach is that users first experience and learn by doing. After that Roots & Routes provide the theory. The education material online can support the actual learning by giving new ideas and good examples in practise. Roots & Roots also follows an innovat- ive approach as it comes to sharing knowledge. By using the learning blogs and social networking tool the time where knowledge can be exchanged is expanded. The know- ledge can be shared faster because the possibility to ask questions online about work- shops for example. There is also more peer to peer education. Users can upload audio/video for other users to comment on. Users can listen to each others beats or view music videos. By peer to peer education online the knowledge transfer expands. 3
  • 4. Figure 1: Homepage of Roots & Routes with a short introduction of R&R, news and resent videos Figure 2: Online profile of a user1 1 The discipline of the user is displayed in the upper left corner. The projects and activities that the user participate in is displayed on the left side. When participated in an event or activity of Roots & Roots the user can become member of a group. The groups have a own environment where they can ask questions and ask advice at the (peer) coaches. 4
  • 5. Problems encountered and lessons learned The first projects, till 2003, focussed on users meeting the professionals and each other and develop their talents. It were short projects of about a week and were very intens- ive. Workshop, master class, performance at a festival and project was over. Participants were clear in that the projects were very cool, but everyone was back at home because there was no follow up. That was the starting point for Roots & Routes to think about the next step in this learning chain. This leaded to the development of Summer School and after that a close partnership with the vocational education. To reach to target group has been an issue for a long time. The word Summer School is not appealing by itself for the target group. This is addressed through working on brand- ing and the deployment of users as ambassadors. Also working with professionals who are idols for the target group is an important strategy. 5
  • 6. Collaborating institutions in LINKS-UP Institute for Innovation in Learning, Friedrich-Alex- ander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany www.fim.uni-erlangen.de Arcola Research LLP, London, United Kingdom www.arcola-research.co.uk eSociety Institute, The Hague University of Applied Sciences, The Hague, The Netherlands www.esocietyinstituut.nl Servizi Didattici e Scientifici per l’Università di Firen- ze, Prato, Italy www.pin.unifi.it Salzburg Research Forschungsgesellschaft, Salzburg, Austria www.salzburgresearch.at European Distance and E-Learning Network (EDEN), Milton Keynes, United Kingdom www.eden-online.org 6